 I can't you can't stop the sale. I can't you can't stop the sale. I can't you can't stop the sale. I'm here to save the number. One, two, three, four, profit's not what God works for. One, two, three, four, profit's not what God works for. I've been working in the nonprofit sector for basically my entire life and I've never seen the sector this unanimous about anything. Everybody across the sector, liberal organizations, conservative organizations, environmental organizations, health organizations, all of them realize that we all rely on the dot org ecosystem. It is not a product to be sold. It's not this asset that you can let acquire a bunch of value over 16 years and then sell it to a private equity firm. It's something special. It's part of the infrastructure that the global NGO sector relies on. And you can stop it. Dot org's not for making profits. This is their job. This is their responsibility. They are meant to ensure that decisions about all of these domains are made in a multi-stakeholder process. That's a weird jargon-y word, but it means to be really important. First of all, it means that every person who has a dot org domain should have been told that that ownership was potentially changing. It also means that they should have been given a way to participate in that decision. Neither of those things have been done by internet society or ICANN. And we know that if we were to make a decision about who could own and manage the dot org domain that truly had nonprofit and the public's interest at heart, it would not be a private equity firm, right? That is not even willing to tell us who was in charge of that private equity firm. So we understand the role that ICANN has. Apparently more than they seem to. And we are calling on them to step in, stop the sale, and to immediately open up a multi-stakeholder process. This protest is not the end, it's the beginning. I can. You can stop it. Dot org's not for making profits.